Wednesday, July 26, 2023

So much for sanctions and technology, redux

 

A little over a year ago I noted that many Russian weapons were using US-made microchips and other hardware.  Following the outbreak of the Ukraine war the USA implemented strict sanctions to prevent Russia getting its hands on US technology to power its weapons.  However, it looks like they're not working as well as they should.


Russia is stepping up production of one of its most effective weapons, the Lancet-3 loitering munition or kamikaze drone. Television news footage shows a massive new facility with hundreds of the weapons being manufactured as the makers claim that production is being tripled.

. . .

The Lancet-3 has proven lethally effective in Ukraine. It has an eight-foot wingspan, weighs about 35 pounds and cruises at about 70 mph with a range of 25 miles and a highly effective anti-tank warhead: videos show Lancets apparently taking out Leopard 2 tanks and a wide range of other targets including artillery, anti-aircraft systems, personnel carriers, command posts. While there is a question over just what the hit rate is – misses may greatly outnumber hits – a large number of Lancets could do a lot of damage. Defense thinktank RUSI notes that the Lancet is becoming become Russia’s preferred weapon for counter-battery strikes, possibly for its ability to find and target artillery which has moved away from its firing position ... the Lancet relies on an imported U.S.-made Jetson TX2 chip for its brains ... this has already been superseded and NVIDIA now produce a successor, the Jetson Orin with around 200 times more computing power. It is an open question what sort of processors Zakharov can now acquire and in what numbers.

Zakharov says that the new production facility has been funded by State money, although it is not clear that any new order has been placed. The difficulties of the Russian procurement system appeared to have caused delays with getting Lancet-3s out, which is why they only started appearing in numbers several months after the invasion. Bendett quotes publicly-available Russian sources saying that the lancet costs about 3 million roubles or $35,000.

Meanwhile Russian volunteer groups are producing small FPV attack drones by the hundred, and the Russians continue to bombard Ukraine with larger Iranian-made Shahed loitering munitions – at least 25 of them in the Southern region on the night of 17th July according to Anton Gerashchenko, Advisor to the Minister of Internal Affairs. After a poor start, Russia is now embracing a new type of warfare with different sized of low-cost kamikazes for short, medium and longer ranges in what is increasingly becoming a war of drones. Whether Russia’s reality can match Zakharov’s claims is another matter.


There's more at the link.

Of course, one can't fully trust any reports coming out of either Russia or Ukraine.  Both sides are lying through their teeth, and most "news" from the combat zone turns out to be more or less propaganda.  Nevertheless, enough video footage of the current situation has emerged to demonstrate that the Lancet-3 drone is effective against Western-supplied armor.  Here's a Russian-sourced video clip illustrating how it works.  Bear in mind that this video is heavy on the propaganda, and is not necessarily a reliable news source.  I include it here only to show the Lancet-3 at work.




I'm not surprised to see that US-made components are getting through to Russia despite stringent international sanctions.  There's too much money to be made by selling them to stop the trade entirely.  Indeed, so-called "dual-use" technology (that may be used for civilian or military purposes) is almost impossible to stop, as consumer goods using it can be bought openly, shipped to their destination, and the technology extracted there for use in weapons systems.  (I previously described one way in which South Africa did this during the international arms embargo against that country.)

Russia also seems to be using its modern weapons more effectively.  It can't afford to make many advanced tanks and other major armament systems, but by turning to technologically more sophisticated systems like the Lancet-3 it's reducing its dependence on older systems and gaining flexibility.  Ukraine did surprisingly well to turn back the initial invasion efforts, but I think it'll find it more and more difficult to make headway against an increasingly efficient and better-equipped Russian military.  The war is turning into a technology-against-technology struggle, and the human factor seems to be less and less critical on the battlefield.

That's why it'll really suck to be a grunt on tomorrow's battlefield.  You're likely to become no more than a casualty statistic, without ever knowing what gee-whiz technology wiped you out.  At present most such weapons have a human operator, but increasingly they're becoming fully automated, making their own decisions about who and what to kill without any consideration of humanity or mercy.  Microchips murder without feelings or conscience, which is why I expect them to dominate future armed conflicts.  I suspect prisoners of war are going to become a rare breed . . . it's much cheaper and simpler to use technology to kill the enemy, rather than capture him, feed him, treat his wounds and house him.

I fear that such an approach may come to dominate internal security systems and policing as well, in nations that don't bother with inconveniences such as human rights.  As far as they're concerned, warehousing dissidents and criminals in prisons is expensive, so why not save money by disposing of them once and for all?

Peter


19 comments:

Aesop said...

Be a real shame if someone jacked up a large shipment of specific chips on purpose, and ensured that shipment "became available" for export to RU through third parties.

Which may or may not have already happened. ;)

Importing technology is always a double-edged sword.
Ask American Indians how that worked out for them re: Winchesters.
For that matter, see how well it's working out for us for basic pharmaceuticals, now sourced nearly exclusively from overseas manufactories.


As for the greater point: things in Ukraine are settling into a slog, for both sides, and a paucity of anything Russia can call a "win".
Which is what toppled the last Czar there too.

Even Russian patience has limits.

Anonymous said...

In order to place sanctions on US-made components, the components must actually be made in the US. When they are made in China and your relations with China aren't exactly going well, then it is much more difficult to keep those components away from Russia.

Gerry said...

US Made chips? I thought that was a myth.

It looks like you can pick them up and a developer kit from a dozen suppliers as well as ebay.
Pretty hard to control export with that many sources.

MNW said...

US chips, made in Asia... ROC, PROC, and Maylsia. Russia has good relations with two of those and they do have some domestic chip manufacuring.

If we designed and made everything here than you could embargo the chips. Since we do not, in practical terms, you cannot embargo.

MNW said...

Except in this case anyone who whould replace Putin would crank things up to 10.

That would not necessarily be better IMHO

Mind your own business said...

Realize that not many chips are "US-made" anymore. The bulk come from Taiwan or Chinese-controlled manufacturing centers. They may have been designed here, but that is not where they are manufactured. That technology is not under our control.

The companies may be US based, but more likely are multinational corporations. And they have outsourced their manufacturing to corporations with questionable loyalties.

The real concern is that US military hardware is now dependent on electronics that are not made in the US. We are as likely to be hamstrung by having tech withheld from us as the Russians (or other adversaries) are at having tech withheld by us. The mere fact that we have to depend on sanctions, i.e., begging someone else to implement our policies, tells you we are not in control.

Having technological superiority is a status that is always deteriorating. Technology has a way of diffusing everywhere and there is never any guarantee that our technology is superior to some other country's, particularly when our educational system is fast becoming a laughing stock compared to other parts of the world.

Sherm said...

Near as I can tell, prisoners of war are a fairly recent innovation. Historically, the norm seems to be to ransom the rich ones, enslave the strong ones, and kill the rest. The rich aren't fighting anymore. Machines stand in for slaves. That leaves only the last option.

Anonymous said...

For the win

Ray - SoCal said...

Lots of older semiconductors do not need to be made on the latest fabs in Taiwan. The only reason they are is to cut costs. Lots of U.S. military equipment used old semiconductors.

I’m not sure on the background of the writer. Uk based, seems to have written for wired and the guardian. I’m very suspicious of uk based writers due to the amount of uk based propaganda.

Simplicitius has a detailed write up, which has a pro Russian bias.

What seems to have happened is the Ukrainians started the latest phase of the war with a drone advantage. Using cheap Chinese dji drones and larger Turkish Drones. Russia had neglected drones.

Now Russia has responded with the ability using ecm to neuter most drones, and shoot down the Turkish Drones that were so effective in Azerbaijan.

And Russia now has more effective drones from the larger Iranian Drones, to these low cost suicide drones.

As well as 3:1 more artillery, hypersonic missiles, and better air defense.

And Russia is out producing Ukraine on drones.

PM said...

When the first reports came out of the Russian military stripping washing machines to use in weapons systems, I was referred to a report (sorry can't find it now) that stated that up until the early-noughties, Russia's in-house microchip production was about four years behind the leading edge in Taiwan/Europe/USA.

In the early noughties the Russians stopped publishing data on the subject.

The same report mentioned that you don't need bleeding edge technology for missiles/drones if you build an ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit).

All of which said, and acknowledging Peter's mention of the dangers of accepting what is demonstrably propaganda from both sides, I'm not holding my breath for the Russians to run out of high tech weaponry.

Zaphod said...

US Made? It is to laugh.

US-designed sure.

Componentry made in Taiwan, PRC, South Korea, Japan.

PCB manufacture, assembly, testing almost certainly done in PRC.

Software is mostly open source.

What is the USA going to do? Send in the Marines to invade the Pearl River Delta and also Zhejiang Province in order to enforce these hand-waving edicts?

I suppose could reindustrialise.. Will literally have to reinvent the wheel in many industries though. MBA cloud people don't get that much institutional knowledge secret sauce has died with those Useless Old White Men. Get back to me in 20 years.

lynn said...

I don't want to go to war with these people. They are innovating at a high rate of speed.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, but Aesop, according to your math and the numbers you shared from sources you agreed with, there should be no Russian military left to "slog" with. Every last officer should be dead, almost every enlisted man with them, and some angry, bereaved mother should've shot Putin already. Oh, and Russia should already be totally out of ammunition. Champion tapdancing there, senor. Bravo. The secret king is always right!

TRX said...

SM Stirling's "The Stone Dogs" is an alternate-universe story set in a future where a culture called the Draka rule most of the Old World. The Draka's technological focus was biology. The New World stayed on its mechanical/electronic path.

Despite saber-rattling, there was trade between the two cultures. The Draka used a lot of North American microprocessors. And then one day, they all stopped working at the command of the North Americans, and the cold war turned hot.

That was written in 1990.

Every reasonably-powerful microprocessor made in the last ten years has such a back door, accessible over the LAN or internet. Intel, AMD, ARM. Supposedly it was to allow updating corporate desktops remotely, but everyone kept it hidden, and Intel originally denied it.

Which is why China initiated a crash program to make its own microprocessors. So did Russia, but I haven't heard anything about their progress.

TRX said...

> Ask American Indians how that worked out for them re: Winchesters.
---
Worked just dandy for Sitting Bull at Little Big Horn; he had Custer massively outgunned.

Custer's Trapdoor Springfields were several generations obsolete when they were issued, but that's why they were stuck with. Many of the Indians were carrying repeaters; Civil-War-era tech that the US Cavalry hadn't bothered to adopt. Trapdoors were cheap, and they were only fighting Indians, so no need to invest in up-to-date weaponry. Or so War Department reasoned...

Anonymous said...

Once upon a long time ago, I worked as an engineer in a weapons plant. To cut to the chase, the "official" pass rate on the production floor was about 93% with a goal of 95% (we're making progress, we need more funding to close the gap).
Some problems showed up: a senior tech guy from HQ was called in. Turned out the actual pass rate was closer to 55%. The unofficial attitude was "these weapons likely won't be used - so who cares?"
Why would I think any of these attitudes have changed in the many decades since?

I won't get into defense ICs - that was once my business. My guess is the situation is worse than expected - we started dumping our IC capability back when "out-sourcing" was the thing. I still blame Clinton/Gore for passing our technology to our dearest friends in Peking.

Anonymous said...

Don't forget Custer left his gatlings behind because he considered them heavy and too slow to move... and he was in a hurry to write gis name into history.

Aesop said...

Anonymous 7:40PM,

Instead of pulling imaginary allegations out of your underpants, link to anything, anywhere where I said any of what you imagine.
I'll send you $20 per quote where you can back any shred of that hogwash up, care of the bloghost here. There's your big chance to come through.

You won't do that, of course, because you can't.

The open fool always has to make things up out of whole cloth, but reality is a harsh croupier when the roulette ball keeps landing on 00 for you. So we know why you won't sign your work and own your bilge either.

Back under your bridge with you.

Aesop said...

TRX,
Little Bighorn was one day.
How did the Indians do for the next 36,500?

If it wasn't for bingo and cigarettes now, they'd be an extinct curiosity.